wiki/content/20201001110806-typescript_functions.md

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---
2024-10-30 17:34:11 +00:00
date: 2020-10-01
2024-05-06 20:40:05 +00:00
id: 6df4db64-8ad2-4190-9d4e-3e6f77021a31
title: TypeScript Functions
---
# TypeScript 4.0
## Variadic Tuple Types
### Pre 4.0 situation
Consider the following
[function](20201006111125-javascript_function_declerations) using
[Tuples](20200929163624-typescript_tuple_type):
``` javascript
function concat(arr1, arr2) {
return [...arr1, ...arr2];
}
```
The only way to type this in [TypeScript](20200929161126-typescript)
used to be:
``` typescript
function concat(arr1: [], arr2: []): [];
function concat<A>(arr1: [A], arr2: []): [A];
function concat<A, B>(arr1: [A, B], arr2: []): [A, B];
function concat<A, B, C>(arr1: [A, B, C], arr2: []): [A, B, C];
function concat<A, B, C, D>(arr1: [A, B, C, D], arr2: []): [A, B, C, D];
function concat<A, B, C, D, E>(arr1: [A, B, C, D, E], arr2: []): [A, B, C, D, E];
function concat<A, B, C, D, E, F>(arr1: [A, B, C, D, E, F], arr2: []): [A, B, C, D, E, F];)
function concat<A2>(arr1: [], arr2: [A2]): [A2];
function concat<A1, A2>(arr1: [A1], arr2: [A2]): [A1, A2];
function concat<A1, B1, A2>(arr1: [A1, B1], arr2: [A2]): [A1, B1, A2];
function concat<A1, B1, C1, A2>(arr1: [A1, B1, C1], arr2: [A2]): [A1, B1, C1, A2];
function concat<A1, B1, C1, D1, A2>(arr1: [A1, B1, C1, D1], arr2: [A2]): [A1, B1, C1, D1, A2];
function concat<A1, B1, C1, D1, E1, A2>(arr1: [A1, B1, C1, D1, E1], arr2: [A2]): [A1, B1, C1, D1, E1, A2];
function concat<A1, B1, C1, D1, E1, F1, A2>(arr1: [A1, B1, C1, D1, E1, F1], arr2: [A2]): [A1, B1, C1, D1, E1, F1, A2];
```
### Post 4.0 situation
1. Tail example
Consider the following example:
``` javascript
function tail(arg) {
const [_, ...result] = arg;
return result
}
```
TypeScript 4.0 bring 2 changes here.
1. Changes
1. Generic spreads in tuple types
The [spreads](20201014094144-spread) in [tuple
type](20200929163624-typescript_tuple_type) syntax to be
[generic](20200929163051-typescript_generics):
``` typescript
function tail<T extends any[]>(arr: readonly [any, ...T]) {
const [_ignored, ...rest] = arr;
return rest;
}
const myTuple = [1, 2, 3, 4] as const;
const myArray = ["hello", "world"];
// type [2, 3, 4]
const r1 = tail(myTuple);
// type [2, 3, 4, ...string[]]
const r2 = tail([...myTuple, ...myArray] as const);
```
2. Rest elements can occur anywhre in a tuple
[Rest](20200922162500-rest_parameters) elements can occur
anywhere in a [tuple](20200929163624-typescript_tuple_type),
not just at the end:
``` typescript
type Strings = [string, string];
type Numbers = [number, number];
// [string, string, number, number, boolean]
type StrStrNumNumBool = [...Strings, ...Numbers, boolean];
```
2. Concat example
Note that in cases when we [spread](20201014094144-spread) in a type
without a known length, the resulting type becomes unbounded as
well, and all the following elements factor into the resulting rest
element type.
``` typescript
type Strings = [string, string];
type Numbers = number[]
// [string, string, ...Array<number | boolean>]
type Unbounded = [...Strings, ...Numbers, boolean];
```
Therefore the `concat()` example can be typed with:
``` typescript
type Arr = readonly any[];
function concat<T extends Arr, U extends Arr>(arr1: T, arr2: U): [...T, ...U] {
return [...arr1, ...arr2];
}
```
# Examples
## Parameter annotations
``` typescript
function tralala(tra: number, la: number) {}
```
## Return type annotation
``` typescript
interface Foo {
bar: string
}
function tralala(): Foo {
return {bar: 'tralala'}
}
```
## Optional Parameters
``` typescript
function foo(bar: number, optional?: string) {}
```
``` typescript
function foo(bar: number, optional: string = 'This is an optional string') {}
```
## Overloading
This is for documentation purposes but imho just makes things more
confusing.
``` typescript
// Overloads
function padding(all: number);
function padding(topAndBottom: number, leftAndRight: number);
function padding(top: number, right: number, bottom: number, left: number);
// Actual implementation that is a true representation of all the cases the function body needs to handle
function padding(a: number, b?: number, c?: number, d?: number) {
if (b === undefined && c === undefined && d === undefined) {
b = c = d = a;
}
else if (c === undefined && d === undefined) {
c = a;
d = b;
}
return {
top: a,
right: b,
bottom: c,
left: d
};
}
padding(1); // Okay: all
padding(1,1); // Okay: topAndBottom, leftAndRight
padding(1,1,1,1); // Okay: top, right, bottom, left
padding(1,1,1); // Error: Not a part of the available overloads
```
## Declaring Functions
Use this to declare function type without providing implementation:
``` typescript
type LongHand = {
(a: number): number;
};
type ShortHand = (a: number) => number;
```
Overloading is supported as well:
``` typescript
type LongHandAllowsOverloadDeclarations = {
(a: number): number;
(a: string): string;
};
```